Okay guys. How about this statement
in the actual article:
The case prompted David Cameron to announce that home owners and shopkeepers would have the right to protect themselves against burglars and robbers.
Last year, Peter Flanagan, 59, who fatally stabbed a burglar armed with a machete at his home in Salford, Great Manchester, escaped prosecution after the Crown Prosecution Service ruled that he was acting in self defence.
The favorite 'Tony Martin' case that's always referenced in these incidents was totally different. Mr. Martin was indeed a victim of burglary, however, the subsequent mistake he made was in order to gain revenge on the burglar(s) he set up a scenario to encourage someone to break in, then shot them as they tried to escape. Neither in the UK or the US is that behavior either tolerated or considered 'self-defense'.
Given that both the tenant and his wife have been arrested, it suggests there may be more to the story than the simple: 'The man is believed to have grabbed a legally owned gun after they were disturbed by the break-in early yesterday. He is understood to have fired at the intruders who then fled the isolated house...before calling the police.'
Why arrest her, unless she played some part in the alleged 'break in'? Perhaps, after the previous burglaries, they decided to try the 'Tony Martin' approach?
In any event, there is yet no way of knowing the true story since this is simply a story cobbled together out of a police press release, so let's wait and see before deciding it's those silly British toffs and their nanny state messing with ordinary people again.